37 research outputs found
Absence of differential predation on rats by Malaysian Barn Owls in oil palm plantations
Barn Owls (Tyto alba javanica) have been widely introduced in Malaysian oil palm plantations to control rodent pests. However, their effectiveness in regulating rodent populations is unknown. We investigated whether Barn Owls selected prey with respect to size and sex classes based on data from 128 pellets of Barn Owls compared to 1292 live-trapped rats in an oil palm plantation in Malaysia. The birds mostly fed on Rattus rail as diardii, the most commonly trapped species. Body mass of prey consumed was predicted based on models derived from measurements from trapped rats. Sex of prey was determined by pelvic measurements with reference to those taken from specimens of known gender. There was no clear selection of prey by Barn Owls in relation to size or sex of prey, and no difference in the body mass of prey between the owls' breeding and nonbreeding seasons. The absence of differential predation in Barn Owls may partly explain the lack of dear evidence that they regulate rodent populations and thus act as successful biological control agents
Selective dynamical imaging of interferometric data
Recent developments in very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) have made it possible for the Event Horizon
Telescope (EHT) to resolve the innermost accretion flows of the largest supermassive black holes on the sky. The
sparse nature of the EHT’s (u, v)-coverage presents a challenge when attempting to resolve highly time-variable
sources. We demonstrate that the changing (u, v)-coverage of the EHT can contain regions of time over the course
of a single observation that facilitate dynamical imaging. These optimal time regions typically have projected
baseline distributions that are approximately angularly isotropic and radially homogeneous. We derive a metric of
coverage quality based on baseline isotropy and density that is capable of ranking array configurations by their
ability to produce accurate dynamical reconstructions. We compare this metric to existing metrics in the literature
and investigate their utility by performing dynamical reconstructions on synthetic data from simulated EHT
observations of sources with simple orbital variability. We then use these results to make recommendations for
imaging the 2017 EHT Sgr A* data sethttp://iopscience.iop.org/2041-8205Physic